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दस्तावेज़
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OCR Page 1 of 42
--
Relative internal liberalization as expressed in a
willingness to observe internationally recognized
human rights and a degree of pluralism and decentrali-
zation in the political and economic spheres.
1st
3.
The balance sheet of "differentiation" an analysis of the
past and current policies of "differentiation" by the U.S. and
its Allies, with an assessment of the positive and negative
results for U.S. policy in the region, U.S. relations with its
Allies, and their impact on U.S. -Soviet relations. 1ST
4.
Instruments for implementing differentiation: The review
will indicate the means which the United States can use to reward
countries that meet its criteria and withhold rewards from those
that do not.
A.
Economic : an analysis of such instruments as MFN (annual
and multi-annual) - credits, IMF membership, concessional
sales of foodstuffs, rescheduling of overdue loans, and
technology transfer.
B.
Cultural: scholarly and scientific exchanges, and the
nature of information beamed to a given country.
C.
Political: high level visits, activities in international
fora (e.g., CSCE and the United Nations), and restrictions
on consular and diplomatic personnel. ts)
The study will establish U.S. policy toward Eastern Europe and
provide basic policy guidance for other studies of matters dealing
with the region. (s)
5. Allied cooperation: What needs to be done to secure maximum
Allied cooperation in the pursuit of our policies. 1st
6.
Regional aspects: An analysis of the individual countries
of Eastern Europe -- Poland, East Germany, Czechoslovakia, Hungary,
Romania, Bulgaria -- with a view to determining to what extent
they meet our criteria, where they seem to be heading, and what
specific issues in their relations with the United States and the
Western Alliance are likely to come up in the years immediately
ahead that will bear on the policy of differentiation. U.S. policy
toward Yugoslavia and Albania will also be treated, but in a
separate context. ss
Administration
Management of the NSSD 5-82 review will be the responsibility
of an interagency review group that will report its findings not
later than April 30, 1982. The review group will be chaired by
the Department of State and will include Assistant Secretary-level
representation from the National Security Council staff, the
Department of Defense, the Central Intelligence Agency, the
Joint Chiefs of Staff, the Treasury Department, the Department
of Commerce, the International Communication Agency, and the
Department of Agriculture.
UNCLASSIFIED
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